Archive for the ‘Commissioner Flemming’ Category
Smith County 2008 Who Is Responsible For Jail Overcrowding?
Smith county 2008 Who is responsible for jail overcrowding?
Just who is responsible for the Smith county jail overcrowding situation, and how can we solve the problem? Perhaps we have been looking at this all wrong! Maybe a new approach is needed. Let’s exercise a little logic about the issue of local jail overcrowding and see what we can come up with from that angle.
The real problem:
The local jail is over crowded. This is something that all sides agree on.
The potential solutions:
- Building bigger and bigger jails, using more and more taxes to keep them up and build even bigger ones.
- Decreasing the number of people in the jail.
Why do we have this problem?
- Because we are slow to process pretrial detainees
- We arrest and incarcerate people for ticketable offenses
- We detain people for offences even when the detention makes no sense.
How can we solve these problems?
- As for the first, what is needed is a streamlined system, and in order to accomplish this, we need more courts.
- The second, state law allows for the ticketing of non violent minor offenses. Again, new courts would be a part of the answer.
- Another part of the answer would be for officials to get behind the bill that was signed by Governer Perry, and get out of the way!
- Child support offenders and others of the same nature make up a big part of the problem, it makes no sense to incarcerate them. They can not catch up on child support payments while behind bars. Once again, this involves more work at the judicial level, and therefore, more courts.
Who is responsible for the problem?
The common denominator in all of this? The Smith county Commissioners Court! In reality, it is the court who doles out the dollars for whatever programs it deems necessary, and that means that it is the court that is standing in the way of meeting the requirements of the remedial order that Commissioner Fleming is so fond of mentioning.
Who’s Job is it to Build a Jail
A lot has been made of county commissioners Fleming’s statements about the commissioners being responsible for building a jail, not, she pointed out, the elected judges. The criticisms are justified. If the people responsible for sending people to the facility to begin with tell the people in charge of building the facility that the facility is not needed, it might make sense to listen to them!
The attitude seems to be, that whether anyone wants the jail or not, they will have it! Whether the jail is needed or not, it will be built. The real question is: Why? Why is the commissioners court so dead set on building a jail with all the evidence against it? What is to be gained by such arrogance and obstinacy? Is it economic, political, or personal? It would seem to be one of these options, but which?
My tendency is to believe that in most matters of this type money is the motivation, but I do not see that in this case. At least no evidence of this has come to our attention.
The idea of political motivation is a possibility, but lacks sanity. The political atmosphere would seem to be against building the jail, and against higher taxes. The Incarcerex political motive doesn’t seem to hold water in a county so justifiably opposed to tax increases. Furthermore, running the jail in the same race as the school bond would seem to be political suicide with those who favor education over incarceration, as, for instance, educators.
What personal reasons could exist? I will have to pass on this one, other than to say that if it is some sort of supremacy issue, a political urinating contest, it should cease!
Elected Judges Oppose Jail Plan Tyler Smith County
If there is any truth coming out of the commissioners court, it is becoming more difficult to discover. County Judge Baker, and Commissioner Fleming seem to have been more deceptive than we initially thought! When asked if the Judges in the Smith Court were aware of the plan for the new jail bond, the answer was affirmative.
That was apparently not the case, in information revealed Thursday the elected judges seem to have been left out of almost all of the decision making process. That is truly a sad state of affairs, when we consider that it effects both where and how cases are handled.
Now that the judges have made their displeasure known, perhaps they will become more vocal in their opposition!
We would love to hear from anyone, in any position of authority concerning this issue. You have a forum available, pro or con.
